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Showing posts with label Deborah Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deborah Brown. Show all posts

Sunday, October 23, 2016

Electric Caresses curated by Diana Buckley




ELECTRIC CARESSES Curated by Diana Buckley
October 1 — 23, 2016
Joe Ballweg / Paul DeMuro
Margaux Ogden / Erika Ranee
Hosted by Deborah Brown, 324 Ten Eyck St, Brooklyn, NY 11206

Brooklyn, New York—Electric Caresses is a group exhibition featuring works by Joe Ballweg, Paul DeMuro, Margaux Ogden and Erika Ranee. In conjunction with Bushwick Open Studios from Oct. 1-2, 2016, and three weekends to follow, this exhibit explores highly nuanced electrifying imagery through large format paintings by artists that evoke an ability to speak to the present through electrifying metaphors. A contained and perhaps non-electric image can be obvious—(like an old still life found in a second hand store), and it can be subtle—(like a dusty portrait of a child painted in a flat mat hue). Yet the art of our time, as viewed in this exhibit, yields to re-contextualizing and re-framing our pragmatic use of things and the way we enliven them.



Joe Ballweg’s intellectual arsenal contains more scintillating image-data than an average person holds. His inquisitive and quirky formation is precisely painted and positioned around spackled multi color hues that he hand-mixes prior. These flamboyant colors allude to a digital 1980’s Gen X era, flowing elegantly amidst a masculine composition—this is a common trait found in Ballweg’s works. He produces, also, such images through developing sketches of the composition in his sketchbook, which shows an organized progression of one idea. By drawing varying stages of ideas, the method helps to avoid the risk of losing the concept entirely as it is transferred onto a significantly larger surface.


Paul DeMuro is inspired by a plethora of artists, from Judy Chicago to Georges Seurat. His massive 91 x 112 inch painting fixates the viewer through repetition of hand held mirrors. The encompassing diamond shaped vortex painted on the outer layer alludes to a pulsation, perhaps a base-heavy beat heard in trip-hop. Both Ballweg and DeMuro’s paintings alternate between an electrifying-metaphor that shares commonalities with their counterparts, Ogden and Ranee in this exhibit.


Margaux Ogden paints and writes directly on unprimed canvas reflecting an immediate and vulnerable intimacy.  Her text is drawn from everyday life referencing relationships, confessions, literature, jokes, numerical equations, observations and occasional nonsense. The resulting tone is reflected, or negated, by her sensuous color palette.


Erika Ranee is an urban archivist. She builds paintings layered with visual freestyle in the form of Energy-Tags. She collects discarded memorabilia – like magazine images of hip hop moguls, old hole-ridden sleep shirts, and snippets of conversations from eavesdropping ventures on the street, the bus, car or train. These urban artifacts are subsequently added to the mix and embedded in a metallic, viscous preserve of paint and shellac. Her painting is an exercise in pushing paint around to articulate a contemporary time capsule on canvas.



Diana Buckley is an independent curator based in Williamsburg, NY, working primarily with contemporary artists throughout the five boroughs. She earned her BFA with an emphasis in Art History Theory and Criticism from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and an MA in Art Administration from the University of New Orleans. She is the Director of Advancement for ProjectArt.org, a nation-wide social impact organization working to provide free access to arts education and studio space for emerging artists. Her curated group exhibitions include, I am What I am Not Yet, A Survey of Brooklyn's Moment, Madelyn Jordon Fine Art, 2015; The Space Between, Paul Kolker Collection, 2014; Schiller and Dream within a Dream New Century Artists, 2014; Shrink It Pink It, 80 Artists, Cathouse FUNeral Gallery, 2014; Persona, Colleen Asper and Amy Beecher, 7 Dunham, 2013; and It's Really Normaling, Brian Belott and Eric Hibit, The Greenwich House, 2013, among others.

Storefront Ten Eyck, the location of this exhibition, is located at 324 Ten Eyck St. in the heart of the Bushwick art community and is a former contemporary art gallery started by artist Deborah Brown to show the work of emerging Bushwick artists and to revisit the work of established artists. Since 2016, the gallery is transitioning wholly to Deborah Brown’s artist studio, and designated for select shows. Deborah Brown is a Bushwick artist, curator, arts activist and board member of NURTUREart, BRIC Artist Advisory Council and Community Board #4 in Bushwick. 

Sunday, September 20, 2015

I am What I am Not Yet, A Surevy of Brooklyn's Moment

During the summer of 2015, I curated a group exhibition featuring 23 artists living and working in Brooklyn, New York.  The exhibit was titled, I am What I am Not Yet, A Survey of Brooklyn's Moment. It spanned July 25 through August 21, 2015.  I conducted studio visits with the artists and formed new relationships with about half of the roster. The following list provides one to two sentences of that which stands out about each artists, albeit their entire body of work teaches us more insight. 

Nichole van Beek: fashionably paints multifaceted layers of hard and soft edged shapes on dyed canvas.  Forms derive from alphabet stencils, represented by Jeff Bailey;
Christian Berman: stellar use of materials, Bushwick based with an intriguing biography; 
Erik den Breejen:  paintings inspired by music lyrics and husband to Maria Louisa Calandra, also in this show; 
Deborah Brown: a renaissance woman! founder of Storefront Ten Eyck Gallery, in Bushwick, and confident-manipulator of Dutch portraiture in her primary role as contemporary oil painter; 
Maria Louisa Calandra: author of pencilinthestudio.com sketch artist who documents - through her drawings and blog - experiences while visiting renowned contemporary artist's studios, such as Wendy White and Trudy Benson; 
Jaqueline Cedar: massive, allegorical canvases and graduate of Columbia University;  
Austin Eddy: comical subjects in collage and canvas materials, could be Picasso's great grandson;
Charlotte Evans: forte equals nostalgic-dreamscapes painted with unique colors, from London now living and working in Bushwick; 
Matthew Fisher: contemporary painter meets waves, suns, sunsets, and unique imagery influenced by a touch of folk in a modern era; 
Xiao Fu: born in China, living in Bushwick, installations based on corruption with Chinese government, sculptural concept is greater than material; 
Charlotte Hallberg: graduate of Yale, day job as designer for the Judd Foundation, shaped panels depict ethereal eyes attributed to the sky;
Steven Hirsch: photojournalist for the New York Post by day, artist by night, represents Gowanus, Brooklyn, in his photographic series of its' polluted canal;
Benjamin King: curator and painter, using wide-ranging mixed media and heavy-tactile mediums,  his use of materials for sculpture include found river-wood and rocks; 
Osamu Kobayashi: i have curated Osamu's works into many exhibitions in NY, his style perhaps speaks to one who appreciates Zen philosophy;
Lauren Luloff: builds wall-fabric-canvases using hand dyed fabrics and techniques learned while living and working in India, she she recently had a solo show at the hole gallery;
Katherine Newbegin: represented by Leslie Heller; photographer who seeks abandoned buildings and empty environments around the world, i.e., temples, theaters, and stadiums;
Gary Petersen: Contemporary painting meets the Jetsons, works in his studio in the heart of Bushwick with an extensive exhibition history; 

Sarah Peters: fine sculptor with a recent review in the New York Times, devoted to bronze;
Willie Wayne Smith: head designer and builder for Macy's windows, a painter and installation artist, style evolving rapidly;  
Letha Wilson: represented by Higher Pictures, excellent exhibition CV, photography/ sculpture based artist who errs more on the side of being a sculptor, which is imperative to understanding her work - watch this video
Birgit Wolfram: born in Germany, lives in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where she maintains a studio and dedicated painting practice - recent series entitled, Schiller that was exhibited by myself in 2014 and with new works by other curators in Germany this past summer; 
Sun You: puts together office pins, pink plastic flowers, brass-chains, tiny nails, magnetic spheres, and rods, upon visiting her studio I viewed hundreds of tiny wall sculptures the size of quarter dollars.

Below is the press release. For this one in particular, I focused on an underlining tone of promoting artists in Brooklyn, as they say, the Brooklyn way. 


        Nichole van Beek, Doodad, 2015, acrylic and fiber paste on dyed canvas, 22 x 22 in

Big things are happening in 2015. In Brooklyn, things are changing fast, and artist Meccas are being created. This rapid change spurs creativity and innovation, and in a few short years, Brooklyn has become a global brand. The eyes of the entire world are following Brooklyn to determine what happens next. From June 25 - August 21, 2015, Brooklyn comes to Westchester. 22 re-defining, Brooklyn artists, representing a sampling of the Brooklyn vanguard, will be exhibiting their newest work at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art in Scarsdale.  If you've been reading about all the dynamism taking place in this borough, this is your opportunity to get a firsthand experience of Brooklyn's pulse.The exhibit title, I am What I am Not Yet, is inspired by a quote of the late philosopher of aesthetics, Maxine Greene.  Greene believed that artworks we encounter are “situated encounters”, meaning, an audience of a given artwork apprehends that work in the light of their backgrounds, biographies, and experiences.  In I am What I am Not Yet, 22 Brooklyn based artists have each experienced Brooklyn through their own unique lens, and try to relate their own “situated encounters” in a way that, in aggregate, conveys a multi-faceted interpretation of Brooklyn. -Diana Buckley

Deborah Brown, Masquée, 2015, oil on canvas, 24 x 24 in


Maria Louisa Calandra, Loren Munk's Studio, 2014, pencil on paper, 8 x 11 in
(as published on Calandra's art blog, pencilinthestudio.com)



Osamu Kobayashi, Filling, 2015, oil on canvas, 58 x 60 in



Charlotte Hallberg, Skies Eyes, 2015, oil on shaped panels, 38 x 19 (L) x 38 x 21 (R) in


Willie Wayne Smith, Things To Bury, 2013, airbrush on canvas, 40 x 50 in

Letha Wilson, Salt Flat Cement Dip (3)2014, c-print, white Portland cement, 30 x 40 in

                             
Social tags:  #IAWIANY #Brooklyn #Westchester @Madelynjordonfa #DianaBuckley @Diana.buckley